diumenge, 22 de gener del 2023

SALVATORE, Giovanni (1611-c.1688) - Messa (III) con l'organo al choro (1641)

Circle of Bernardino Luini (c.1480-1532) - Angels making music


Giovanni Salvatore (1611-c.1688) - Messa (III) con l'organo al choro (1641)
Performers: Emanuele Cardi (organ); Gregoriano Urbis Cantores
Further info: Opera Omnia Per Organo

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Italian composer and organist. He was almost certainly a pupil of G.M. Sabino and Erasmo Bartoli (‘Padre Raimo’) at the Conservatorio della Pietà dei Turchini at Naples. Later he became a priest. In 1641 he was organist of SS Severino e Sossio, Naples, and later organist and maestro di cappella of S Lorenzo Maggiore. From 1662 to 1673 he taught at the Conservatorio della Pietà dei Turchini. During his last years he was rector and maestro di cappella of the Conservatorio dei Poveri di Gesù Cristo; as his successor was appointed in 1688 he probably died in that year. It was once thought that he taught Alessandro Scarlatti but this is unlikely. According to Liberati and Pitoni, Salvatore was greatly esteemed during his lifetime. Liberati even placed him above Frescobaldi on the grounds that he could compose fine vocal works without confusing their style with organ music. The vocal music has not yet been published or critically investigated. The larger works are written in the concertato style typical of the mid-17th century, with effective progressions and expressive dissonances but a limited harmonic idiom. Homorhythmic chordal and imitative textures alternate between the first and second choirs, both of which are skilfully combined with instrumental sinfonias. Contrasting metres and textures and occasional word-painting are characteristic. A set of four-voice responsories for the Office of the Dead are simpler in style. 

The organ works in the Ricercari, written in open score, demonstrate much technical skill. They are in the southern Italian tradition of the early 17th century as represented by Mayone, Trabaci and Frescobaldi, and though they do not depart radically from it in style or form, they are more tonal, close-knit and concisely organized. Salvatore occasionally used durezze e ligature (chromaticism, sharp dissonances and striking harmonic progressions) and the unpredictable, virtuoso, rhapsodic style associated with the Neapolitans and the Romans. The volume contains eight contrapuntally interesting ricercares, one on each of the eight tones, with two, three or four subjects and their permutations. In no.4 the four subjects, having been treated at length in their original forms, appear in turn in traditional cantus-firmus settings; in no.8 the hymn Iste confessor is presented as a cantus firmus in each voice. Despite its title the volume also includes other music. In three canzonas the opening section is repeated at the end; a fourth is a set of contrapuntal variations on the bergamasca melody, reaching a brilliant concluding virtuoso climax. Three organ masses include Kyrie settings based on the melodies Orbis factor, Cunctipotens genitor and Cum jubilo; brief versets in imitative or toccata style are intended for alternation with a choir. Salvatore appended a brief treatise, Breve regola per rispondere al choro, to the third printing of G.B. Olifante’s Porta aurea sive directorium chori (Naples, 1641).

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